Angler learns why his record fish was rescinded; it’s not good

A Kansas fisherman who had his state-record white crappie voided and “didn’t understand why,” now knows the reason. X-rays don’t lie.

A Kansas fisherman who had his state-record white crappie voided and “didn’t understand why,” now knows the reason his record fish was tossed out and the old record reinstated.

After an investigation prompted by a tip, officials from the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks discovered weights inside the “record” catch, as reported by KSNT.

Bobby Parkhurst submitted for state-record consideration a crappie that weighed 4.07 pounds on a certified scale. It was confirmed by John Reinke, the KDWP assistant director of Fisheries, as previously reported.

Parkhurst had caught the fish last April from Pottawatomie State Fishing Lakes No. 2, and it was reported that it topped the 59-year-old record of 4.02 pounds caught by Frank Miller of Eureka in 1964.

That was before a witness called the KDWP with a tip, saying the weight of the crappie in question was initially 3.73 pounds.

“To preserve the integrity of KDWP’s state-record program, KDWP game wardens met with the angler who voluntarily presented his fish for re-examination,” KDWP spokeswoman Nadia Marji told KSNT. “When staff used a handheld metal detector to scan the fish, the device detected the presence of metal.”

The game wardens then took the fish to the Topeka Zoo and Conservation Center where an X-ray showed two steel ball bearings in the fish’s stomach.

When the KDWP rescinded the record, it did not mention weights in the fish, only saying that the “written application form was not ‘true and correct,’” pointing to the listed weight on the form.

Parkhurst had insisted he filled out the application properly, saying, “I don’t understand why they’re doing this to me.”

“I did it the whole way they wanted me to do it,” Parkhurst told KSNT. “I went through the procedures, I wrote down what I caught it on, I did everything they wanted me to do by the book. I did everything I was supposed to do. Their biologists looked at it more than once.”

The incident is reminiscent of when two anglers in Ohio were caught red-handed having put lead weights into walleye in an effort to win a big-money fishing tournament in September 2022. They eventually admitted guilt and were sentenced to 10 days in jail, lost fishing privileges for three years and forfeited their $100,000 boat.

In this case, the stakes were much smaller. Katie Garceran of the Shawnee County District Attorney’s Office told KSNT that after an investigation, it was determined that there was insufficient evidence to prosecute the case concerning the creation of false information.

Photos courtesy of Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks. 

Kansas rescinds state-record crappie, angler doesn’t know why

Fisherman seeks answers and wants his frozen catch returned after Kansas approved it as a record, then took it away after an investigation.

A fisherman who caught a huge white crappie that was approved as a state record by the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks last April had his frozen trophy catch—and record—taken from him and he doesn’t know why.

Bobby Parkhurst caught a 4.07-pound white crappie from Pottawatomie State Fishing Lakes No. 2 that the KDWP recognized as topping a 59-year-old record.

A press release from April 4, 2023 stated, “After inspection and measurement by John Reinke, assistant director of Fisheries for the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, the lunker catch was put on a certified scale where it was recorded as weighing 4.07 pounds – the equivalent of six cans of soup.

“As fisheries biologists, we get the chance to see a lot of big fish but this one is certainly for the books,” said Reinke. “This crappie measured in at 18 inches long and 14 inches in girth, so it truly deserves a spot on the state record list.”

But seven months later, the KDWP changed its mind, and reinstated the old record of 4.02 by Frank Miller of Eureka in 1964.

Parkhurst told KSNT 27 News that game wardens came to his home with a search warrant and seized the frozen fish. According to KDWP spokeswoman Nadia Marji, the fish was seized in connection with a “formal investigation.”

Parkhurst attempted to get answers from the KDWP but has yet to get them. Nor has he gotten his fish back.

“They didn’t tell my anything,” Parkhurst told KSNT last week. “I don’t understand why they’re doing this to me.”

A tip received by KDWP after the record was announced prompted wildlife officials to launch an investigation into the record and the review process.

“There was not an error in the verification process,” Marji told KSNT. “Rather, information supplied to the department by the angler via his written application form was not ‘true and correct.’”

Pressed for further explanation, Marji told KSNT the issue came from the listed weight of the white crappie on the form.

“The fish appeared normal and healthy, and was accurately identified by staff,” Marji said. “However, had the application been filled out accurately by the angler, it would have not qualified as a state record.”

Parkhurst insists he filled out the application properly, and added that he wants his fish returned.

“I did it the whole way they wanted me to do it,” Parkhurst told KSNT. “I went through the procedures, I wrote down what I caught it on, I did everything they wanted me to do by the book. I did everything I was supposed to do. Their biologists looked at it more than once.”

Marji told KSNT that it’s still an active case, an apparent indication that there is more to the story.

The original press release announcing the record was updated in November, stating at the top of the release: “Upon further review by KDWP officials, the crappie caught by Parkhurst could not be confirmed; therefore, the previous record for Kansas’ largest crappie still stands (Miller, 1964).”

Photos courtesy of Bobby Parkhurst and the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks. 

Giant crappie catch in Kansas breaks 59-year-old record

A Kansas angler was recognized Tuesday for his recent catch of a massive white crappie that broke a 59-year-old state record.

A Kansas angler was recognized Tuesday for his recent catch of a massive white crappie that broke a 59-year-old state record.

Bobby Parkhurst of Topeka reeled the 4.07-pound, 18-inch crappie from Pottawatomie State Fishing Lake No. 2 on March 5 after enticing the fish onto his hook with a live minnow.

RELATED: Georgia angler’s catch of giant crappie stuns biologists

The Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, in a news release issued Wednesday, stated that the astonishing weight of the fish “was the equivalent of six cans of soup.”

Assistant Director of Fisheries John Reinke, who measured the crappie, observed: “As fisheries biologists, we get the chance to see a lot of big fish but this one is certainly for the books. This crappie measured in at 18 inches long and 14 inches in girth, so it truly deserves a spot on the state record list.”

The previous state record was the 1964 catch of a 4.02-pound, 17.5-inch white crappie by Frank Miller.

The world record for white crappie stands at 5 pounds, 3 ounces, for a 1957 catch at Mississippi’s Enid Dam.

Woman lands record crappie on 35th wedding anniversary

A Tennessee woman celebrating her 35th wedding anniversary last weekend reeled in a 3-pound white crappie to set a waterbody record.

A Tennessee woman celebrating her 35th wedding anniversary last weekend reeled in a 3-pound white crappie to establish a lake record.

Beverly Shaw and her husband were fishing at J. Percy Priest Lake with Brian Carper’s Guide Service when the 17-inch crappie struck. It was the largest white crappie ever landed at the 42-mile-long reservoir in north-central Tennessee.

Photo courtesy of Brian Carper’s Guide Service

Guide Eric Dickens boasted about the catch Sept. 5 on Facebook:

“Ok, just got the fish weighed on a certified scale. Miss Beverly Shaw on my trip yesterday afternoon has officially got the Percy Priest white crappie lake record. Coming in at a certified 3 pounds.”

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For comparison, the Tennessee state record is a 5-pound, 1-ounce white crappie caught at Garner Brown’s Pond in 1968.

The state record for black crappie stands at 5 pounds, 7 ounces.

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‘Giant crappie’ could break a 46-year-old record

An angler who thought he found a school of bass on his fish finder got the surprise of his life when he hooked a fish, but it wasn’t a bass.

A fisherman who thought he had found a school of bass on his fish finder got the surprise of his life when he hooked one of the fish that wound up being a record-size crappie.

David Burruss of Clear Lake Outdoors in Lakeport, Calif., made the catch Wednesday while fishing at Clear Lake, known as a premier bass lake. But his black crappie took the spotlight on this day as it weighed 4.33 pounds (or 4 pounds, 5.3 ounces), which would break a 46-year-old California record if confirmed, as reported by the Lake County Record-Bee and Field & Stream.

Dave Burruss with his record-size crappie. Photo courtesy of Terry Knight

The current record is 4 pounds, 1 ounce caught by Wilma Honey at New Hogan Lake on March 29, 1975.

“I thought I had hooked a nice bass until I got it up to the boat and saw that it was a giant crappie,” Burruss told the Record-Bee.

Burruss used a 4-inch swimbait with an underspin to catch the crappie. Photo courtesy of Terry Knight

He took the fish to Lakeside County Park and called outdoors writer Terry Knight to meet him.

“When I first saw the fish, I was dumbfounded,” the 85-year-old Knight wrote. “I have seen a lot of big crappie in my lifetime but nothing like this one.”

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They weighed the fish on two scales and both gave the digitized weight of 4.33 pounds. A certified scale at a local supermarket confirmed the 4.33-pound weight, which should solidify it as a record. The crappie measured 17.71 inches.

For comparison, the all-tackle world record for a black crappie is 5 pounds, 7 ounces caught in May 2018 at Richeiseon Pond in Tennessee.

Burruss took his fish to the Department of Fish and Wildlife so a biologist could identify the fish and take scale samples, and start the record certification process.

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“It had been a slow day bass fishing, but I saw a few bigger fish on the Garmin Livescope that I thought were maybe bass,” Burruss told Field & Stream. “But these fish were suspended 6 to 10 feet deep in 25 feet of water. They ended up being huge crappies. There were two other crappies with this fish the same size that I couldn’t get to bite.”

If confirmed, Clear Lake would become the owner of state records for both black crappie and white crappie. The white crappie state record of 4 pounds, 8 ounces was caught in 1971.

Burruss plans to have the fish mounted and put it on display in his shop.